So once again, the prescription is actually the same, which is when you're making a request where you might get a no, keep your attention on the other person. You hear the no, you don't break the kind of connection of attention, because the person saying no oftentimes will experience that break in attention and feel like they've done so much damage just by speaking their truth in that moment. And that guilt will very quickly turn to anger. One of the things that we do is when we train a woman to hear no, we actually do, “No, no, request, no,” over and over and over and over again. She hears no, she keeps her attention on the other person then asks another question. Gets curious. Not, “Why not,” because that's trying to crush the resistance because anytime somebody resists something they have an internal reason for it. No is a gateway to incredible power and incredible intimacy. Sometimes it's better to get a no to your first request than a yes. Because what you get to do is you get to find out what the other person actually cares about. Most people don't say no in order to be asses. Most people don't like to say no, and if they're in a position where they're saying no it’s because something got triggered that they need to protect and if they value it enough to say no. And if the person on the other side can stay curious and connect with that thing that they value, the no either disappears or the entire nature of the conversation changes to a far more generative and powerful one. Because now you know something about the other person. Now you're connected with something tender that the no was designed to protect. And if you can get to that place to genuine curiosity when you hear no, it stops being about you. It even stops being about the request and it starts being about what's there on the other side that I can connect you to create an incredibly powerful relationship and generate a new possibility that would not be there if the person said yes.